The NBA announced its All-Defensive teams on Monday, and no Warrior player received a single vote.

“Get in line,” Warriors head coach Mark Jackson said before his team flew from the Bay Area to San Antonio for Game 5 of the Western Conference semifinals. “Our executive finished in seventh place. Steph Curry was home during All-Star week. Joe Lacob is probably the No. 7 owner in the league. Harrison Barnes didn’t get any Rookie of the Year votes. He shouldn’t have been the Rookie of the Year, but he should be First-Team All-Rookie. Jarrett Jack wasn’t the Sixth Man of the Year. The only thing they got right was me.”

Jackson finished seventh in the Coach of the Year voting, which was announced last week. Meanwhile, his team has made marked strides — doubling last season’s win total and improving their standing in opponent’s field-goal percentage and defensive rebounding by more than 20 spots among the league.

In Sunday’s 97-87 overtime victory against San Antonio, the Warriors might have had their most franchise-changing victory ever. They managed to win a playoff game — against a proven winner — with toughness, guts and defense while shooting less than 40 percent from the floor.

“We are a defensive-minded team,” Jackson said. “The culture has truly changed. There was a time that the Golden State Warriors couldn’t win a game unless they were making shots. This team has bought in on the defensive end. They take great pride in it. They battle. I thought it was a huge win for us — especially when things were not going our way — we got it done, defensively.”